USDA’s new 5 pronged effort to do one thing, something, to manage the rampant unfold of extremely pathogenic avian influenza gained’t do a lot to decrease egg costs – a minimum of not through the first half of 2025.
The U.S. Division of Agriculture:
- Desires you to know that it plans to extend Wildlife Biosecurity Assessments on egg farms. The hope is that when educated, egg producers will conform to finest practices to scale back the possibility of chicken flu contamination. Whether or not the vast majority of U.S. egg farmers will play alongside … who is aware of.
- That it’ll proceed to “indemnify producers whose flocks should be depopulated,” and discover new packages “to help farmers to speed up the speed of repopulation.”
- It would “study methods to soundly develop provide within the business marketplace for eggs” and “develop modern methods to restrict the extent of depopulations in HPAI outbreaks.”
- It pinky swears the company might be “hyper-focused on a focused and considerate technique for potential new technology vaccines, therapeutics, and different modern options.”
- It would search far and huge, excessive and low soliciting “public enter on options, and can contain Governors, State Departments of Agriculture, state veterinarians, and poultry and dairy farmers on vaccine and therapeutics technique, logistics, and surveillance.”
The reality? This huge egg salad can have zero affect on egg costs by the primary half of the yr and certain past. USDA pledged $1 billion to scale back chicken flu within the U.S. However there isn’t a silver bullet, and the money gained’t clear up the difficulty within the quick time period.
All of it comes right down to primary financial provide and demand ideas.
Regardless of crazy-high file retail egg costs, shoppers are ponying up their money. The January Client Value Index reported the typical value of a dozen Grade A eggs reached $4.95, surpassing the earlier file of $4.82 set two years in the past. Much more surprising, egg costs elevated 15.2% in January – the largest month-on-month enhance in almost a decade.
And that’s not the half of it. USDA now says it expects egg costs to leap an further 41% this yr.
You’d suppose excessive egg costs have considerably curbed demand. Not so. USDA experiences:
“Grocers proceed to restrict client buying to stretch present provides, however this has heightened client consciousness of the egg scarcity resulting in a rise in alternative shopping for, which additional reduces out there provides.”
The underside line is egg demand stays sturdy for dwindling U.S. provides. Producers culled 13.2 million birds final December, and a minimum of 26.9 million birds have been culled to date this yr. Egg laying hens are down 3.8% from a yr in the past and the fewest since January 2016. For a New York minute, USDA wistfully thought of one way or the other formulating a plan to scale back culling in contaminated flocks. It has since walked that again.
There was suggestion that the U.S. may import eggs to alleviate the scarcity. That is utter nonsense. The Egg Producers Heart Union in Turkey desires to help. The union says it can ship the U.S. 420 million eggs this yr.
That feels like lots. Till you notice that can inventory U.S. grocery cabinets for about 36 hours. Yup. A day and a half.
If all this isn’t sufficient, there are a couple of wild playing cards that would supercharge egg costs within the weeks forward. Anybody care to counsel egg demand gained’t speed up throughout Easter season? And we’re simply weeks away from the spring chicken migration, doubtlessly bringing who is aware of what chicken flu strains to farms throughout the U.S.
Even newly minted USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins didn’t sound all that optimistic in asserting USDA’s new technique: “It’s going to take some time to get by, I feel within the subsequent month or two, however hopefully by summer season.”
An excessive amount of demand. Not sufficient provide. No resolution in sight. Exhausting boiled details.